Hi Carolus,
I found 2 files, that seem to be the same, but I'm not sure. Could you please check it? 6 Morceaux, Op.55 (Vieuxtemps, Henri) Could it also be Op 61 ??? But the Capriccio is the same as here: Capriccio_'Hommage_à_Paganini',_Op.55_(Vieuxtemps,_Henri).
Hi Carolus, but it seems that the 6 Morceaux, Op.55 (Vieuxtemps, Henri) are op. 61, see here and here.--TobisNotenarchiv 19:57, 26 September 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus! Not a big issue but when I added the LinkEd for the editor of The Art of Preluding, Op.300 (Czerny, Carl) who is named John Bishop it naturally linked to the existing composer John Bishop which now shows our 17th century Mr. Bishop editing Czerny's work in the 1830s. The LOC Authority record for both is John Bishop. How should we handle this? Thanks! --Cypressdome 02:15, 26 September 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus - is there a standard for how to abbreviate Opus posthumous? I did a search and found "Op. post.", "Op. posth." and "Op.Posth." Is there any agreement as to which is correct, or to include it at all? If not, I will raise the question in the forums. Thanks! Massenetique talk email 03:14, 26 September 2011 (UTC)
I would agree with that - there are a number of work pages out there using "Op.Posth" which looks wrong to me because of the capital P, and while I think the space in "Op. posth." is more elegant, might it be better to use "Op.posth." to coincide with our standard of no space before the number? Massenetique talk email 03:21, 26 September 2011 (UTC)
I'm trying to move 17thCentury scores to imslp from site
http://aaswebsv.aas.duke.edu/wlscm/WLSCMcatalogue.html
(suggested in contributor page of imslp)but they're tagged with license CC by-nc-nd 2.5 when trying to donload them.
They're re-writings in modern form of original manuscripts found in libraries.
My question is: -can their modern contributors to that site claim for CC by-nc-nd 2.5? -Have I to consider them, in imslp, as "retypesettings" o "new compositions"? -which license can I use in imslp? (CC by-nc-nd 3.0 cannot be chosen for "retypesettings")
Thank you very much! --jeko89 11:26, 1 October 2011 (UTC) [copied from P. Davydov's talk page]
I just saw, that you deleted the links to recordings of two complete and uncomercial Frescobaldi Toccatas. I just had a discussion with someone of the german Wikipedia, who deleted those Links in the german Wikipediaarticle of Frescobaldi without any founded reason. So I am quite interested to know, for what reason you think that those links in the Frescobaldi Kategory deserve to be deleted while links to the Pianosociety in many categories for instance do not, having advertisment on their site, often without any really that outstanding quality of their amateur recordings or even not that an representative spectrum of compositions available there. The Pianbosociety-Link in the Clementi-Kategory leads just to 2 sonatas and a few of the sonatinas. That is far from being much more representative than two well interpreted Frescobaldi Tocatti on a historical instrument. In my opinion those Pianosociety-Links are still ok even with all their advertisment down each of their sites because it is at least free and more than nothing. But why should users interested in Frescobaldi not be informed about those free recordings that give an impression of the virtousity of Frescobaldis Toccati, where there are definitly no others recordings linked at all? With the same arguement one could delete all IMSLP entries with just a few scores of a composer available as not representative. You know that this would be nonsens, so why should this make sens when it comes to external links???--Fahl5 17:50, 2 October 2011 (UTC)
OK, I am not offended at all. I just didn't understand. But OK: Your "formatting rules" inspires me to do, what I would like to do in any way, to work a bit more on this wonderful composer. So hold on. I hope in a few month I may offer you a link to a more representative own Frescobaldi-section on my site ;-)--Fahl5 05:11, 4 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus, unfortunately I couldn't find out anything about Joseph (also Josef) Ebner. I think he was a violist. If this first file passes the exam, I'll scan the other suites. So I didn't upload it to the idividual work page for 1007. Cheers --Ralph Theo Misch 23:10, 2 October 2011 (UTC)
Thanks, Carolus - I've already continued. --Ralph Theo Misch 22:50, 3 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus! Archive.org has Pfitzner's Op.52 Cello Concerto in an arrangement by Ernst Gernot Klussmann (1901–1975) that was published in Berlin in 1944. On first glance that would seem to make it under copyright most everywhere except for the fact that it would have seem to have been impossible for a German firm to register works with the U.S. Copyright Office in the middle of World War II. No entry appears in the CCE in the mid-1940s and I couldn't locate a renewal 28 years later. Therefore, I assume I can post it on the U.S. server, correct? Did the U.S. ever make any "special exceptions" for such works that would have been impossible for the composer/publisher to register with the U.S. Copyright Office? Thanks! --Cypressdome 02:40, 3 October 2011 (UTC)
Addition to Category: Instrument Composition Lists
Hello Carolus:
I wonder whether I could ask for your advice.
I have aded a line to this list, but it does not display. Please could you check it.
It is "List of Compositions for easy piano trio" after "List of Compositions for piano trio".
Regards WilliamBunting
I just got an email announcing an addition of yours to my talk page. However, when I look at my talk page I don't see any changes since my own comments added some hours ago.
Do I miss something? Reccmo 12:04, 4 October 2011 (UTC)
Hello, Carolus! I was wondering if the imslp.ru infringes any trademark laws? Also, what exactly is the difference between trademark and copyright law? Cheers, Lndlewis10 01:50, 6 October 2011 (UTC)
See my response on Davydov's page :/ Cheers, Lndlewis10 19:28, 6 October 2011 (UTC)
Thank you − I will use the templates! Do we have a list of this kind of templates?
About the Lancer's Quadrille: I don't see why C. Schubert's version is more an arrangement as A. Tatzel's, or as the anonymous 1895 version. They're all (slightly different) arrangements of an anonymous (and popular) source; I think they all deserve to be tagged as arrangements, or not to be, but together. Cheers − Pierre Ch. 07:03, 6 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus! I'm not sure whose attention I should bring this to but I've noticed this issue over the past few days. We now have six empty work pages under William Herschel. Do we know if the contributor plans to upload any of these scores? Thanks! --Cypressdome 01:51, 7 October 2011 (UTC)
Hello, Carolus! I've been looking on line, and I don't see anything about how to actually get a job in the copyright office. Do you know if a law degree is required? Librarian experience? Liberal arts? Thanks, Lndlewis10 19:54, 7 October 2011 (UTC)
Yes, I also heard that there were some layoffs. I think I heard that it really isn't really as bad as the media makes it sound; nobody I know well has been affected. I think it's possible you could get a job in the library because there is a lot of sorting that needs to be finished sooner or later. For example, I hear that there are a number of unreleased classical recordings that still need to be sorted. Respectfully yours, Emery 02:52, 8 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi, Carolus -- a couple of questions about Vaute: 1) I noticed you deleted a file (Danse naive) because it was only partial, and probably a tickler/advert for the full work as published by Armiane. Given that Vaute is deceased now, and Armiane is unlikely to approve upload of the full work, should I just delete the page? 2) Paysage has text by Simone Simon. I can't find anything about a poet by that name, just an actress who died in 2005. Given that some works by the WI contributors had copyright violations of text, can you find anything more on who this poet might be and what the dates are? Thanks, Steltz 08:42, 9 October 2011 (UTC)
Would these be safe at least in Canada? Daphnis 03:23, 10 October 2011 (UTC)
When you checked in the 5 John Ward In Nomines, among a number of other things, you changed the order of clefs for Treble viol 2 for In Nomines 3, 4, and 5. You changed the File Descriptions but you did not change the order of the files themselves. This left the wrong descriptions for each of those files. When I mentioned this on my user page, P.davydov went to the page and reverted all of the changes you had put in, leaving my (perhaps erroneous? or at least undesirable) original version of the page. I do not plan to get into a 'wiki-war', so I am doing nothing else now and leaving it to the Admins to sort out. Afolop 13:43, 10 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus. I've managed to track down the mysterious "D. Usov" who translated Mussorgsky's songs into German for the 1930s critical edition. He turns out to be Dmitry Usov, who died in 1944 (some sources say 1943). I thought you should know in case it has implications for the copyright for those editions where he was involved (which are currently tagged V/V*/C*) — P.davydov 21:10, 11 October 2011 (UTC)
Thanks for the help with the Stamitz, I've sorted it out now. Can you please do me another favor? Rzewski's Antigone Legend has text by Berthold Brecht. It is PD in Canada so it should have a [TB] block. I can't do this because I'm not a copyright reviewer. Could you please block it? Thanks, Steltz 18:32, 12 October 2011 (UTC)
Dear Carolus, #135865 puts #111913 in a different light (see also the discussion page there). I'm pretty sure that #111913 is an arrangement (or a vocal score) of the 2nd (orchestral) version. Yours respectfully --Ralph Theo Misch 22:49, 12 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus! For some time I've been trying to identify the first two Mazurkas (G major and B flat major) in the 1880 Breitkopf & Härtel edition. I thought they might have been the pair listed as B.16 but the one in G major didn't match the one we had posted. I found incipits for the Mazurkas here: Chopin.pl which confirmed that they are B.16 but also confirmed that the items on the B.16 page are in fact Op.67 No.1. I didn't want to simply move the posted scores to the correct page because at least one of the typeset scores has B.16 at the top of the first page of music (the other has "WN26" which means nothing to me). What shall we do? Thanks! --Cypressdome 03:23, 14 October 2011 (UTC)
Dear Carolus
Thank you so much for revising the structure of the 'Book of Psalmes' (Ravenscroft) work page and adding the 'LinkComp' templates. I wasn't aware of that elegant facility which seems to be just what is needed for changing the current work page for 'Canzoni per sonare' (G.Gabrieli) into a 'Various' work page. As you'll notice from WIMA's page for this collection published 1608 by the Venetian printer Alessandro Raverij it contains pieces by multiple early 17th century composers, most of which are eventually going to be added to IMSLP. I've mentioned this in Davydov's talk page after he had removed the IMSLP person 'Alessandro Raverij' and the cross link to him which I had added to the 'Canzoni per sonare' work page.
Reccmo 08:49, 14 October 2011 (UTC)
I just followed what was already entered. I would suggest grouping by either number of voices or by language, or by both. To list individual pieces gives a horrendous list for a user to plow through. I still have a few more to enter, these, I believe, are in the French group--I haven't verified this yet. Afolop 04:09, 15 October 2011 (UTC)
It looks like you started editing my entries here before I had completed the entries. The results were lost titles and pieces going into the wrong places. I still have a good deal of editing to do to these entries. May I finish that before additional changes are made, please. Afolop 00:40, 16 October 2011 (UTC)
Actually I believe some of my entries were overwritten when you saved your edits. When I enter a series that require the same editing I use the action on the page that returns to the page being edited and enter several more before I do the editing. If someone else is changing the page, that apparently may not return to the place I have been working. Hence, the last 3 entries went to the Scores and Parts tab rather than the Transcriptions and Arrangements I was working on. I saw that at about the same time you did and I tried to move those wrong entries also. It ended up with some of the titles going onto the wrong set of files. What a mess. I think things are straightened out now, and I have finished everything I have on that page. Thanks. Afolop 01:23, 16 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus, thanks for cleaning up my submissions to Grieg Op.43. I had the not-so-bright idea to work on the site while waiting at the airport, and I had to sign off abruptly when they moved my flight to another gate! Best, Massenetique talk email 06:45, 16 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi! I've read your observations on Concerto Grosso 1 and Concerto Grosso 2. I'm thankful to you for these. I wanted to clean these pages and to upload the other concertos but I've some doubts for the cleanup them: 1.
tab "Full Scores" will contain: subtab "Complete" [1 pdf for full complete work] subtab "I. First mvt" [1 pdf for full 1st mvt] subtab "II. Second mvt" [1 pdf for full 2nd mvt] ...
tab "Parts" will contain: subtab "Complete" [#instruments pdfs for complete work] subtab "I. First mvt" [#instruments pdfs for 1st mvt] subtab "II. Second mvt" [#instruments pdfs for 2nd mvt] ...
Is my idea correct??
I've listed complete instrumental setting for each mvt to avoid misunderstanding. If you have some further tips on it, let me know, please :) Many thanks! --jeko89 14:23, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
2. If I merge some WIMA files in a pdf is it correct to mark it as a WIMAProject file?
3. After editing all 6 concertos, I'd like to clean 6 concerti grossi page, a collection of the six I was referring to before.
How can I clean up this page?
tab "Full Scores" will contain: subtab "Complete" [1 pdf for full complete work] subtab "I. First concerto" [1 pdf for full 1st conc.] subtab "II. Second concerto" [1 pdf for full 2nd conc.] ...
tab "Parts" will contain: subtab "Complete" [#instruments pdfs for complete work] subtab "I. First concerto" [#instruments pdfs for 1st concerto] subtab "II. Second concerto" [#instruments pdfs for 2nd concerto] ...
4. and last question :)): For the 6 separate concertos' pages exist Brodersen's WIMA Full Scores and Parts. But in the 6 concerti grossi's page there are OTHER Full Scores and Parts: they're an older different edition (but more confusing, I think).
So what's the more appropriate/appreciate division? single concertos pages --> Brodersen's (WIMA) + older edition split into separate concertos ?? collection page --> Brodersen's (WIMA) concertos merged + older edition?
Thanks for your time :) --jeko89 11:51, 16 October 2011 (UTC)
Thanks for your note about handling collections. I think we need to make a distinction between 'collected works' editions of a single composer (from the 19th century onwards), and collections of pre-baroque compositions.
Taking the 'gesamtausgabe' first, the library approach is to catalogue these sets under the title "Works", with the earliest date of the edition. So in the case of J S Bach, the Library of Congress has:
So if we were to follow the same principle, we might have:
... which could serve as a portal to Johann Sebastian Bach: Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe, along with anything similar for the same composer. Bearing in mind there are seven collected editions for Chopin, for example, for consistency's sake we probably should have a similarly-designed collected works 'portal' for every composer, and we can make sure it sorts first in the list of works in the composer category. Pages like Johann Sebastian Bach: Bach-Gesellschaft Ausgabe could have extra links to the whole volumes, as well as the individual works as at present, but we'd need to experiment with that a little.
As far as the earlier collections of works for composers like Jenkins and Purcell are concerned, things are less clear cut. The later concept of one work being composed and published as an individual item was a little more blurry in the 1500s, when it was more common for groups of pieces to appear sporadically in various manuscript collections (and in different versions), which makes it difficult to know what the original 'work' consisted of. The thematic indexes on the VdGS website illustrate this very well, and show the difficulties involved in collating the different manuscript and printed sources. We can't realistically treat each of Jenkins' compositions for viols as a separate work with its own page, and it makes as much sense to use the VdGS groupings (or Z. numbers for Purcell) as any others. That's not to say that the current groupings can't be improved, although it will be easier to deal with when all the WIMA files have been transferred so we can come up with a coherent and consistent approach — P.davydov 18:22, 16 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus, at the moment it is too dangerous to continue. The cat is constantly trying to conquer the keyboard. --Ralph Theo Misch 23:15, 17 October 2011 (UTC)
The predator's sleeping. I was able to secretly upload the other parts.
BTW: I think you'll know this :-) --Ralph Theo Misch 23:58, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
I'll wait util you have finished changing my files before I continue to finish my entry and my editing of them. Let me know.
And that entry made the following new entries of mine go to the wrong place with no notification to me. This simultaneous editing of the same page by two people at the same time also seems to get confused because both may be attempting to change the same words. Twice in the past two days some of my entries have disappeared (been overwritten?) and had to be done a second time. This in addition to the need for a complete, detailed, review to see what, if anything, has been changed. I am sorry, but I have had it for today. Afolop 02:11, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
You also added the ===Transcriptions ....=== header which transferred my entries to the General (or Scores and Parts) entry position without any indication to me, so everything after that got into the wrong place and had to be transferred later to the proper sub head, an unnecessary burden if you had let me complete my entries. Afolop 11:11, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus, I made my own arrangement of "Lashia..." aria from Handels Rinaldo, that I upload it last week into IMSLP, and you was revising my commit. But now I noticed, that I forgot the sharp in my arrangement and I would like upload corrected version of the scores. Is it possible? And more, is it posible to upload sibelius (.sib) file too? Sorry for my questions, i am novice in IMSLP. Thanks you Vladimír
Hi Carolus, I've noticed that the newly uploaded Cabanilles Tiento 81 is not seen on the Cabanilles composer page unless (I'm) logged in. Hope it's an easy fix? Thanks Wrshannon 01:04, 20 October 2011 (UTC)
I just had a look at some of the recently uploaded arias by Mimihot. To me, it seems that at least the typesets of the arias sung once by Farinelli (e.g. Ombra fedele anch'io) are not made by him/her as indicated on the corresponding work pages but are rather taken from the book "Die Gesangskunst der Kastraten" by Franz Haboeck. --BoccaccioTalk Email 12:00, 20 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus, I've found Haydn's autograph of that work. But it's a huge file (111MB). Shall I upload it tomorrow (the bonsai tiger is sitting in my neck)? --Ralph Theo Misch 23:48, 20 October 2011 (UTC)
Such a transmission would be helpful (German translation not neccessary). Thanks! --Ralph Theo Misch 00:07, 21 October 2011 (UTC)
As Mark Twain observed long ago: Cats were worshipped as gods in ancient Egypt. They have not forgotten this fact. We are but craven servants, eager to obey every whim. :) Carolus 01:56, 22 October 2011 (UTC)
It appears that this copyright was not renewed in the USA and can therefore be tagged and / or moved to the regular server.
Also, respecting your time, are you the best one to ask for such minor mods? Thanks. --Homerdundas 23:57, 20 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus! While it's on my mind I wanted to ask you about three issues. First, the copyright tag on the Georg Schumann edition of Brahms' Horn Trio needs to be updated to reflect non-PD EU. We had it posted with no editor identified but it was identical to the one I didn't upload from RSL so I added the editor. Second is the copyright tag on the first edition vocal score of Wagner's Die Walküre which is tagged !V/!V/!V when all the others are simply V/V/V. Not sure what the former means. Lastly, the so called 3 Supplements to the Breitkopf und Härtel edition of Chopin's works consists of a little over 30 pages of editorial commentary on six of the volumes issued. From an obsessive completionist's point of view it would be nice to have here but how/where would I post it? Thanks! --Cypressdome 04:39, 23 October 2011 (UTC)
Dear Carolus, I'm not sure about the status of this. It's a GDR-printing from 1959, edited by Fritz Koschinsky (1903-1969). It seems to be urtext, the continuo realization is quite functionally. Shall I post it? Thanks! - Humble serviteur --Ralph Theo Misch 23:06, 23 October 2011 (UTC)
Sibley has a number of compilations some of which may pose some less usual copyright issues maybe. For instance this contains several works some of which are PD-US/CA, published mostly before 1923 and then compiled by John Holler (1904-77). The publisher seems to be saying - I may be putting my words in here and just hoping this is so - that only compilation, not editing, occurred and that the scores themselves are identical to their original printings, so that the compiler's work was in selecting them for the collection. (If not, then would have to upload the subselection or two of this i am taking out, to the PD-US server.) Any advice? :) Eric 02:12, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
Sibley doesn't have them uploaded separately, I think, so comparison between the originals and the amount of editing if any done by Holler (though perhaps the plate nos. etc. might also make it seem unlikely any was done- not sure... ok, enough tangents) - if any, yes- would be difficult right now. (If I understand! ) Eric 17:28, 25 October 2011 (UTC) (that said, since another of my goals in doing this is just to add to Eric de Lamarter's category, Hathitrust has some items, so that's good too. :) )
Hello Carolus. It appears that the librettist for this modern composition perished in the Warsaw Ghetto in 1943. I've changed the EU copyright tag to the year 2014, but I'm not sure of the correct status for the US. Could you take a look and make whatever changes you consider necessary? Thanks — P.davydov 22:05, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi Carolus! Sorry to keep bugging you but you seem to be the go-to man around here. I'm trying to transfer some scores by Joseph Marx from the Internet Archive to the US server and am a little puzzled over the status of Herbstchor an Pan. You can view the full score, vocal, score and vocal parts here. The vocal score and parts would seem to be modern reprints of the original scores from a century ago (UE plates 5236 and 5237) but with a modern header and the copyright date removed. I assume they are all eligible for the US server. The full score would appear to be a facsimile of a manuscript (the composers(?)but undated and unsigned) with cover pages similar to the vocal score, no copyright date, modern header, and an UE plate number of 5239. Can this go on the US server? Also, thanks for the information above regarding collections. I shall wait to post the critical commentary until all that gets worked out. Thanks again! --Cypressdome 00:52, 25 October 2011 (UTC)
Dear Carolus, I had to ad this (Royal Decree). At least to clear that matter: Duetto buffo di due gatti (Rossini, Gioacchino). --Ralph Theo Misch 00:24, 28 October 2011 (UTC)
That's actually very curious. They're in the same key, and the accompaniment is very similar. As far as I know, Rossini actually did compose the Duetto buffo di due gatti. While different, the Reissiger has a number of similarities also. Carolus 23:26, 28 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi, could you please have a look at these pages? I corrected small things about the librettists, and maybe it can change something regarding the CR. Thanks − Pierre Ch. 19:59, 29 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi, Carolus: This work has a [TB] block, though it seems to be the original manuscript. Is this block correct? You will see that I've added notes as to a discrepancy in instrumentation that would affect tagging (chorus vs. no chorus), so I wouldn't mind looking at the score, if the [TB] is in error. Thanks, Steltz 20:20, 30 October 2011 (UTC)